ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
February 16,
1995
CITY OF WHEATON,
)
Petitioner,
v.
)
PCB 94-18
)
(UST Fund)
OFFICE OF THE ILLINOIS STATE
)
FIRE MARSHAL,
)
)
Respondent.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(C.A. Manning):
This matter is before the Board pursuant to a motion for
reconsideration filed on January 4,
1995 by the City of Wheaton
(City).
The motion requests that we reconsider our opinion and
order of December
1,
1994 wherein we granted summary judgment in
favor of the Office of the Illinois State Fire Marshal
(OSFM)
and
dismissed this case.
On January 17,
1995,
the OSFM filed a
response requesting that the motion be denied.
For the following
reasons, we hereby deny the motion for reconsideration.
The City’s motion does not meet the standard which guides
our review of motions for reconsideration.
The Board’s
procedural rule on motions for reconsideration directs that we
consider factors including but not limited to “error in the
decision and facts
in the record which are overlooked.”
(35 Ill.
Adm.
Code 101.246(d).)
Our own precedent also provides a
standard upon which we decide motions for reconsideration.
In
Citizens Against Regional Landfill v. The County Board of
Whiteside County we held,
“t)he
intended purpose of
a motion for
reconsideration is to bring to the court’s attention newly
discovered evidence which was not available at the time of the
hearing, changes in the law or errors in the court’s previous
application of the existing law.”
(Citizens Against Regional
Landfill v. The County Board of Whiteside County
(March 11,
1993)
PCB 93-156, citing Korogluyan
v. Chicago Title
& Trust Co.
(1st
Dist.
1992),
213 Ill. App.3d
622,
572 N.E.2d 1154,
1158; ~
also,
Leonard Carmichael v. Browning—Ferris et
al.
(December 16,
1993)
PCB 93—114.)
Each argument of the motion for reconsideration
is rooted in
an argument articulated
in the City’s briefs opposing summary
judgment in this case.
Even though the City does raise “error”
with our application of the law, arguing that the OSFM had no
authority to enter an administrative order “deregistering” an
underground storage tank, this argument is not new, but is
instead repetitive of the City’s responsive filings which have
been duly considered by this Board.
2
Accordingly, the City’s motion for reconsideration is hereby
denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
J.Y1 abstained.
I,
Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
~—
Board, hereb
certify that the above order was adopted on the
day of
_________________
,
1995, by a vote of
‘~
~c.
Dorothy M./Øunn, Clerk
Illinois ~ól1ution Control Board